Stephen Hawking celebrated on new British coin

chinadaily.com.cn
Updated: 05:20 PM (GMT+8) March 14, 2019
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II meets Professor Stephen Hawking during Leonard Cheshire Disability reception at St James's Palace, London, Britain, May 29, 2014. [Photo/IC]

LONDON- One of the world's best-known scientists, Stephen Hawking, is to feature on a new commemorative fifty pence coin, Britain's Royal Mint announced Tuesday.

The design of the new seven-sided coin has been inspired by Hawking's pioneering work on black holes.

It features a black hole represented by concentric circles, as well as his most famous equation which suggested that black holes were not completely black but emitted radiation, now known as Hawking radiation.

Hawking died last year at the age of 76. The physicist writes about black holes in his best selling book A Brief History of Time.

Edwina Ellis, who designed the coin, said: "I wanted to fit a big black hole on the coin and wish he was still here chortling at the thought."

Ellis said she wanted to reflect the way Hawking made difficult subjects accessible, engaging and relatable.

Hawking's daughter Lucy visited the Royal Mint with her brother Tim to see the coins.

She said: "It is a great privilege to be featured on a coin and I hope my father would be pleased to be alongside Sir Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin as scientists who have made it on to money."

Royal Mint director Nicola Howell said: "We are very pleased to honour Stephen Hawking on his own coin. As one of the world's most brilliant physicists, he was a great ambassador for science. His popularisation of science and breakthrough work on black holes stand as great achievements and significant contributions to humanity."

The coin will be available to buy from the Royal Mint later this month, with prices ranging from 10 pounds ($13.42) for a brilliant uncirculated version of the coin to 795 pounds for a gold proof coin.

Xinhua

Timeline of Stephen Hawking's life

File photo of Physicist Stephen Hawking. [Photo/Agencies]

Jan 8, 1942 — Born in Oxford, England, the eldest of four children born to Frank Hawking, a biologist, and Isobel Hawking, a medical research secretary.

1952 — Attends St. Albans School.

1959 — Receives scholarship to attend University College, Oxford, from which he graduates with a degree in Natural Science.

1962 — Begins graduate research in cosmology at Cambridge University.

1963 — Diagnosed with the degenerative nerve disorder ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease, at the age of 21. He is given two years to live.

July, 14, 1965 — Marries his first wife, Jane Wilde, a modern languages student he met at Cambridge.

Stephen Hawking. [Photo/IC]

1967 — The couple's first son, Robert, is born.

1970 — Jane gives birth to a daughter, Lucy.

1974 — Elected as a fellow of the Royal Society at age 32, one of the youngest people to receive the honor.

Stephen Hawking visits the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, June 18, 2006. [Photo/IC]

1979 — Becomes Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, a prestigious position once held by Isaac Newton. Hawking holds the post until 2009. Jane gives birth to a third child, Timothy.

1985 — Admitted to a hospital in Geneva with pneumonia. He survives after an operation, but loses what remained of his speech. The next year he begins communicating through the electronic voice synthesizer that gave him his trademark robotic "voice."

Stephen Hawking speaks to the press during the unveiling of his scientific formula for how England can win the 2014 World Cup at a press conference in London, Britain, May 28, 2014. [Photo/IC]

1988 — Publishes A Brief History of Time.

1989 — Made a Companion of Honor by Queen Elizabeth II.

1995 — Marries his nurse, Elaine Mason.

2007 — Divorces Elaine Mason.

Actor Jim Parsons (right), who plays Sheldon at TV series The Big Bang Theory, poses for a picture with his hero Stephen Hawking on April 9, 2012. [Photo/IC]

2014 — Hawking's life is celebrated in the Oscar-winning biopic The Theory of Everything, based on the memoir Travelling to Infinity: My Life with Stephen, by Jane Hawking.

Stephen Hawking with former wife Jane Hawking, son Tim Hawking, daughter Lucy Hawking arrive at the British Academy Film Awards, Royal Opera House, London, Britain, Feb 8, 2015. [Photo/IC]
Stephen Hawking arrives for the UK premiere of The Theory of Everythingin Leicester square in London, Britain, Dec 9 2014. [Photo/IC]

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